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<td><h1>VMware vSphere Automation Python SDK: client samples README</h1></td>
<td align="right">
<img src="../../docs/resources/vmware.gif" alt="VMware logo" width="187" height="72" border="0"></img>
</td>
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</table>
<p class="Nav">
<img src="../../docs/resources/page.gif" alt="vSphere Automation Python SDK client README" width="13" height="16" border="0"></img> &nbsp;
<a href="../vSphere-Automation-Client-SDK-Python-README.html" title="vSphere Automation Python SDK client README...">VMware vSphere Automation Python SDK: client README</a><br />
</p>
<hr/>
<p>
<script type="text/javascript">
document.write('This document describes the vSphere Automation Python SDK samples that use the vSphere Automation python client library.')
document.write(' (vapi_common_client-' + gVersions.vapiversion + ') ')
document.write('and vAPI runtime library')
document.write(' (vapi_runtime-' + gVersions.vapiversion + ').')
</script>
Additionally, some of the samples demonstrate the combined use of the
vSphere Automation and vSphere APIs. To support this combined use, the vSphere
Automation Python SDK samples require the vSphere Management SDK packages
(<a href="https://github.com/vmware/pyvmomi">pyVmomi</a>)
to be installed on the client.
The examples have been developed to work with python <strong>2.7</strong>,
<strong>3.3</strong>, <strong>3.4</strong> and <strong>3.5</strong>.
</p>
The following sections provide information about using the samples..
<ul>
<li><a href="#dependencies">Python SDK and 3rd party Library Dependencies</a></li>
<li><a href="#packaging">Feature Samples</a></li>
<li><a href="#vcentersample">vAPI Samples for Managing vSphere Infrastructure and Virtual Machines</a></li>
<li><a href="#cltaggingsample">Content Library and Tagging Samples</a></li>
<li><a href="#connectionsample">Connection Workflow Samples</a></li>
<li><a href="#runningsample">Running the Samples</a></li>
</ul>
<a name="dependencies"></a>
<h2>Python SDK and 3rd party Dependencies</h2>
<p>
Please see the instructions for
<a href="../vSphere-Automation-Client-SDK-Python-README.html#installingsdklibs">
installing the SDK and 3rd party libraries</a>.
</p>
<a name="packaging"></a>
<h2>Feature Samples</h2>
<p> The vSphere Automation Python SDK samples are located in the client sample
directory:
<strong>samples</strong><br/><br/>
The following table shows the sample sub-directories and their contents.
</p>
<table border="1" cellpadding="5">
<tr><th>Directory</th><th>Description</th></tr>
<tr><td>vsphere.samples.common</td><td>Samples common classes and abstractions; This package does NOT contain any sample</td></tr>
<tr><td>vsphere.samples.vim.helpers</td><td>Samples and utilities for accessing and manipulating VC objects using pyVmomi</td></tr>
<tr><td>vsphere.samples.lookupservice</td><td>Service discovery sample using lookup service APIs</td></tr>
<tr><td>vsphere.samples.vcenter</td><td>vAPI samples for managing vSphere infrastructure and virtual machines</td></tr>
<tr><td>vsphere.samples.workflow</td><td>Various vAPI work flow samples</td></tr>
<tr><td>vsphere.samples.inventory</td><td>Samples for inventory APIs for retrieving information about vCenter datastore and network objects.</td></tr>
</table>
<a name="vcentersample"></a>
<h2>vAPI Samples for Managing vSphere Infrastructure and Virtual Machines</h2>
<p>
The directory vsphere.samples.vcenter contains samples for the vSphere infrastructure and virtual machine APIs.
You have two options to run samples inside this package:
<ol>
<li>
Run the whole sample suite which contains all vCenter samples using main.py in vsphere.samples.vcenter.setup package. Please see the README in the setup package for detailed steps.
</li>
<li>
Run an individual sample in an existing environment. You can either pass the environment parameters through command line arguments or specify them in setup.py in the setup package.
<br/>
For example, to run the create_default_vm sample in the vsphere.samples.vcenter.vm.create package:
<ul>
<li><code>$ cd /path/to/VMware-vSphere-Automation-SDK-Python-&lt;version&gt;/client/bin</code></li>
<li>Run the sample with the testbed settings specified in setup.py in a Linux machine:<br/>
<code>$ ./run_sample.sh ../samples/src/vsphere/samples/vcenter/vm/create/create_default_vm.py -v</code>
</li>
<li>Or specify the credentials using command line parameters:<br/>
<code>$ ./run_sample.sh ../samples/src/vsphere/samples/vcenter/vm/create/create_default_vm.py -s &lt;server&gt; -u &lt;username&gt; -p &lt;password&gt; -v</code>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ol>
</p>
<a name="cltaggingsample"></a>
<h2>Sample Program Structure for the Content Library and Tagging Samples</h2>
<p>
The Content Library and Tagging samples use a framework to facilitate different
aspects of using the samples. Some of the framework capabilities are:
<ul>
<li>Command line argument parsing.</li>
<li>Specifying mandatory and optional arguments for a sample.</li>
<li>Sample setup, execution and post-execution cleanup.</li>
<li>Information about samples.</li>
</ul>
</p>
Each sample extends the class <code>samples_base</code>.
This class uses <code>service_manager_factory</code> to create and manage the
vAPI service endpoint and vSphere service port. Every sample implements the
following methods from the class <code>samples_base</code>:
</p>
<ul>
<li><code>_options()</code> - Called by <code>samples_base</code> during <code>parse_args</code> phase. This occurs during initialization.</li>
<li><code>_setup()</code> - Called by <code>samples_base</code> during <code>before</code> phase. This occurs after authentication and vAPI and vSphere service initialization.</li>
<li><code>_execute()</code> - Called by <code>samples_base</code> during <code>run</code> phase. At this point all the connections and services are initialized.</li>
<li><code>_cleanup()</code> - Called by <code>samples_base</code> during <code>after</code> phase. This occurs before disconnecting the services.</li>
</ul>
<h3>Samples configuration</h3>
You can specify server, username and password in the configuration file
(sample.cfg). If you use a configuration file, you can run samples without
specifying these options on the command line.
When you run a sample, you can override the configuration file values by
specifying command line options.
<pre style="border: 2px solid #A9A9A9; width: 60em; max-width: 60em; background-color:#DCDCDC;">
[connection]
server=vCenter server IP
username=username
password=password
</pre>
The sample.cfg file can be found under <code>VMware-vSphere-Automation-SDK-Python-&lt;version&gt;/client/samples/src</code>
</br>
</p>
<a name="connectionsample"></a>
<h2>
Connection Workflow Samples:
</h2>
<p>
To work with the VMWare-supported deployment configurations of
Platform Services Controllers (Single Sign-On) and vCenter Servers,
applications need to dynamically discover service URLs to make service requests.
Before making service requests, applications need to authenticate.
They can authenticate using a username and password or with a token obtained
from the Single Sign-On service.
<br/>
vApi connection workflow sample performs the following basic steps to connect
to the vAPI service endpoint (on a management node).
</p>
<ul>
<li>Step 1: Retrieve the vAPI service endpoint URL from the lookup service.</li>
<li>Step 2: Connect to the vAPI service endpoint.</li>
<li>Step 3: Use the username/password to login to the vAPI service endpoint.</li>
<li>Step 4: Create a vAPI session.</li>
<li>Step 5: Validate some of the vAPI services.</li>
<li>Step 6: Delete the vAPI session.</li>
</ul>
The call sequence shown above is implemented in the samples framework through the following modules:</br>
<ul>
<li><code>src/vsphere/samples/common/lookup_service_helper</code> provides methods for discovering management nodes and service endpoint URLs on management nodes from lookup service.</li>
<li><code>src/vsphere/samples/common/platform_service_controller</code> uses lookup_service_helper to discover the Single Sign-On URL (on any of the Platform Service Controller node) and then retrieves the SAML token from the Single Sign-On server by authenticating the given user.</li>
<li><code>src/vsphere/samples/common/service_manager</code> login to the vAPI and vim service endpoints (on a management node).</li>
</ul>
<h3>Running the Connection Workflow Samples:</h3>
<p>
The following parameters are needed for running the samples:
</p>
<ul>
<li><code>lswsdlurl</code> -lookup service WSDL file URL. See <a href="#using_wsdl"> Using WSDL</a></li>
<li><code>lssoapurl</code> - Platform Service controller's/node's (any, since data is replicated) lookupservice soap URL. Ex: https://psc/lookupservice/sdk</li>
<li><code>mgmtinstancename</code> - Instance name of the vCenter Server management node. When only one node is registered, it is selected by default; otherwise, omit the parameter to get a list of available nodes.</li>
<li><code>username</code> - username for authentication with the SSO server</li>
<li><code>password</code> - password for the SSO user</li>
<li><code>skipverification</code> - Do not verify server certificate</li>
</ul>
You can also specify these parameters in the configuration file (sample.cfg).
If you use a configuration file, you can run samples without specifying these
options on the command line.
<a name="using_wsdl"></a>
<h3>Working with lookup service WSDL</h3>
The vSphere Automation SDK for Python samples use the vSphere Automation Lookup Service to obtain the URLs for other vSphere Automation services (SSO, vAPI, VIM, SPBM, etc.).
The SDK contains the Lookup Service WSDL files. The samples use the python SUDS client for accessing the lookup service.
<br/>
The Lookup Service WSDL files are located in the following SDK directory:
<br/>
<code>VMware-vSphere-Automation-SDK-Python-&lt;version&gt;/client/wsdl</code>.
<br/>
You must specify the WSDL file location in the <code>client/samples/src/sample.cfg</code> file and in the lookupservice.wsdl file (located in the WSDL directory).
<ol>
<li>In sample.cfg, set 'lswsdlurl' to the lokkupservice WSDL file location. Use a local file URL specification:
e.g. lswsdlurl=file:///path/to/the/VMware-vSphere-Automation-SDK-Python-6.5.0/client/wsdl/lookupservice.wsdl</br>
(Note: You can also specify the lookup service WSDL path to the sample as a command line option)</li>
<li>In lookupservice.wsdl, set 'import location' to the local lookup WSDL file. Use a local file URL specification.
<pre>
&lt;import location="file:///path/to/the/VMware-vSphere-Automation-SDK-Python-6.5.0/client/wsdl/lookup.wsdl" namespace="urn:lookup" /&gt;
&lt;service name="LsService"&gt;
&lt;port binding="interface:LsBinding" name="LsPort"&gt;
&lt;soap:address location="http://localhost:8080/lookupservice/sdk" /&gt;
&lt;/port&gt;
&lt;/service&gt;
</pre>
</li>
</ol>
</p>
<a name="runningsample"></a>
<h2>Running the samples from the command line</h2>
<p>
You can run the samples from command line using the scripts supplied in <code>VMware-vSphere-Automation-SDK-Python-&lt;version&gt;/client/bin</code> directory:
</p>
Before running the samples:
<ol>
<li>You must set the <code>PYTHON_HOME</code> environment variable to the base directory for the python 2.7</li>
<li>You must install all the dependencies required by the samples on client. See <a href="#dependencies"> Sample Dependencies</a></li>
</ol>
<p>
<strong>Examples:</strong>
</p>
<pre>
$cd /path/to/VMware-vSphere-Automation-SDK-Python-&lt;version&gt;/client/bin
$run_sample.sh ../samples/src/vsphere/samples/workflow/connection_workflow.py \
-vapiurl https://203.0.113.0/api \
-stsurl https://203.0.113.0:443/sts/STSService/vsphere.local \
-username administrator@vsphere.local \
-password AdminPassword
</pre>
</br>
Use the -h option to print information about a sample.
The following example shows the help for the vAPI connection workflow sample.
<pre>
$ ./run_sample.sh ../samples/src/vsphere/samples/workflow/vapi_connection_workflow.py -h
usage: vapi_connection_workflow.py [-h] [-w LSWSDLURL] [-s LSSOAPURL]
[-m MGMTINSTANCENAME] [-u USERNAME]
[-p PASSWORD] [-v]
Demonstrates vAPI connection and service initialization call flow using the
username and password.
Step 1: Retrieve the vAPI service endpoint URL from lookup service.
Step 2: Connect to the vAPI service endpoint.
Step 3: Use the username/password to login to the vAPI service endpoint.
Step 4: Create a vAPI session.
Step 5: Validate some of the vAPI services.
Step 6: Delete the vAPI session.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-w LSWSDLURL, --lswsdlurl LSWSDLURL
Lookup service WSDL URL
-s LSSOAPURL, --lssoapurl LSSOAPURL
Lookup service SOAP URL
-m MGMTINSTANCENAME, --mgmtinstancename MGMTINSTANCENAME
Instance name of the vCenter Server management node.
When only one node is registered, it is selected by
default; otherwise, omit the parameter to get a list
of available nodes.
-u USERNAME, --username USERNAME
SSO user name
-p PASSWORD, --password PASSWORD
SSO user password
-v, --skipverification
Do not verify server certificate
</pre>
<p>
Note: In the above example <b>mgmtinstancename</b> is optional and can be omitted if there's a single vCenter Server management node in the deployment.
When there is more than one management node, the user MUST specify the management node instance name against which the sample needs
to run, else the sample throws <b>MultipleManagementNodeException</b>.
Example of a multiple management node exception:
<pre>
raise MultipleManagementNodeException(MultipleManagementNodeException.format(result))
vsphere.samples.common.lookup_service_helper.MultipleManagementNodeException: Multiple Management Node Found on server
Node name: vcenter-1.example.com uuid: de2afd86-790e-11e4-9c20-0200087f55c6
Node name: vcenter-2.example.com uuid: 545da868-7910-11e4-81e1-020008e89d83
</pre>
Example exception when an invalid management instance name is specified by the user:
<pre>
ValueError: abc is not a valid management node instance name
Available management nodes:
Node name: vcenter-2.example.com uuid: 545da868-7910-11e4-81e1-020008e89d83
Node name: vcenter-1.example.com uuid: de2afd86-790e-11e4-9c20-0200087f55c6
</pre>
</p>
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<p class="Miniscule">Copyright &copy; 2015, 2016 VMware, Inc. All rights not expressly granted herein are reserved.</p>
</td>
<td align="right"><p class="Miniscule">Last updated: 20 Oct 2016&nbsp;|&nbsp; VMware vSphere Automation SDK for Python</p></td>
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